So I was wondering based on the number of students that didn't write, and the amount of people that plan to cancel based on the difficulty of the test... Will these be factored into a curve? Also will this have adverse or positive effects on those that chose to keep their mark?

AffirmativeFaction wrote:So I was wondering based on the number of students that didn't write, and the amount of people that plan to cancel based on the difficulty of the test... Will these be factored into a curve? Also will this have adverse or positive effects on those that chose to keep their mark?

AffirmativeFaction wrote:So I was wondering based on the number of students that didn't write, and the amount of people that plan to cancel based on the difficulty of the test... Will these be factored into a curve? Also will this have adverse or positive effects on those that chose to keep their mark?

The curve is predetermined. How other people do is of no consequence.

while you are correct in that the curve is pre-determined, LSAC does on occasion tweak the curve based on results if they are better than expected. October 2008 was changed, because the median score was too high initially

AffirmativeFaction wrote:So I was wondering based on the number of students that didn't write, and the amount of people that plan to cancel based on the difficulty of the test... Will these be factored into a curve? Also will this have adverse or positive effects on those that chose to keep their mark?

The curve is predetermined. How other people do is of no consequence.

while you are correct in that the curve is pre-determined, LSAC does on occasion tweak the curve based on results if they are better than expected. October 2008 was changed, because the median score was too high initially

AffirmativeFaction wrote:So I was wondering based on the number of students that didn't write, and the amount of people that plan to cancel based on the difficulty of the test... Will these be factored into a curve? Also will this have adverse or positive effects on those that chose to keep their mark?

The curve is predetermined. How other people do is of no consequence.

while you are correct in that the curve is pre-determined, LSAC does on occasion tweak the curve based on results if they are better than expected. October 2008 was changed, because the median score was too high initially

When i studied for the lsat the first time i had an old LSAC book that explained the curve. it said the curve can be tweaked after the results come in, but it isnt drastic. it wont go from a -14 to a -10. I know about the oct 08 because my friend was a testmasters instructor and she said she found out from someone she knew at lsac. so i cant completely confirm that particular instance